RKMBs
Posted By: Rob simpsons, the movie! - 2001-08-13 8:09 PM
Al Jean, executive producer of the THE SIMPSONS, revealed to CINESCAPE this weekend his thoughts on the oft-discussed SIMPSONS theatrical film.


“There's more information than there had been [about a movie],” he said. “When the actors re-signed earlier this year the contracts called for them to do three movies. The price is fixed as to what they'll get paid, but we don't have a script. We obviously want it to be a really good script, so it involves us getting enough time to develop something that we really want to do. It's so much in the planning stages [at this point]."


So while it sounds as though a SIMPSONS film will happen eventually, fans of the show might have to content themselves with the regular episodes of the program for the time being.


“This is just my opinion,” continued Jean. “But it might be good to wait, like Star TREK, until after the show is done. I think it's going to happen but I could not tell you when."

Posted By: Soy un perdedor Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2001-08-13 9:40 PM
that means the Simpsons has got like 1 or two seasons left. They said they wouldn't make a movie until the show went off the air. This is a sign of the end, ladies and gents.
Posted By: Rob Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2001-08-13 10:49 PM
naw, groening has previously said that he retracted that statement.

neither fox, nor groening has any plans to stop the simpsons. and, with ratings actualy improving over the past 3 years, you can expect to see it on for at LEAST another 5 years

Posted By: allan1 Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2001-08-16 7:43 AM
I hope so.Simpson's,Futurama & King of the Hill are the only shows I have to watch & hate missing.
Posted By: Disco Steve Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2001-08-17 4:51 PM
I always wondered why there wasn't a Simpsons movie... Since Power Rangers, Ninja Turtles, and Beevis & Butthead all were made into movies... It does make sense to do it after the show's ended, though...
Posted By: Rob Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2001-08-17 5:47 PM
well, look at the shows you've mentioned. not exactly great company.
Posted By: Disco Steve Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2001-08-18 3:26 AM
Fergot South Park, too. In all of those cases, the movies were probably made to make a zillion dollars at the peak of it's popularity...
Posted By: Chris Oakley Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2007-04-10 4:56 PM
spam
Posted By: Mopius-Jr. Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2007-04-10 9:30 PM
Posted By: Mopius'-daughter Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2007-04-10 11:46 PM
Posted By: Uschi Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2007-07-02 7:36 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070702/ap_o...Lg8fZfWj0EE1vAI

7-Elevens get a 'Kwik-E-Mart' makeover
 Quote:

DALLAS - Over the weekend, 7-Eleven Inc. turned a dozen stores into Kwik-E-Marts, the fictional convenience stores of "The Simpsons" fame, in the latest example of marketers making life imitate art.

Those stores and most of the 6,000-plus other 7-Elevens in North America will sell items that until now existed only on television: Buzz Cola, KrustyO's cereal and Squishees, the slushy drink knockoff of Slurpees.

It's all part of a campaign to hype the July 27 opening of "The Simpsons Movie," the big-screen debut for the long-running television cartoon, which loves to lampoon 7-Eleven as a store that sells all kinds of unhealthy snacks and is run by a man with a thick Indian accent.

For 20th Century Fox Film Corp. and Homer's creators at Gracie Films, the stunt is a cheap way to call attention to their movie, since 7-Eleven is bearing all the costs, which executives of the retail chain put at somewhere in the single millions.

At 7-Eleven, they're hoping it shows the ubiquitous chain has a trait seen in few corporations — the ability to laugh at themselves.

"We thought if you really want to do something different, the idea of actually changing stores into Kwik-E-Marts was over the top but a natural," said Bobbi Merkel, an executive for of 7-Eleven's advertising agency, FreshWorks, a unit of Omnicom Group Inc. "It shows they get the joke."

The monthlong promotion has been rumored a long time — it's hard to keep a secret known by so many suppliers and franchisees — but 7-Eleven managed to keep the locations of the stores quiet until early Sunday morning. That's when the exteriors of 11 U.S. stores and one in Canada were flocked in industrial foam and given new signs to replicate the animated look of Kwik-E-Marts.

The U.S. locations where a 7-Eleven store was transformed into a Kwik-E-Mart are New York City; Chicago; Dallas; Denver; Burbank, Calif.; Los Angeles; Henderson, Nev.; Orlando, Fla.; Mountain View, Calif.; Seattle; and Bladensburg, Md.

The idea grew out of conversations between Fox and 7-Eleven's advertising agency.

"We wanted to make sure the movie stands out as a true cultural event this summer," said Lisa Licht, a marketing vice president at Fox. "It has to stand out from other summer movies and TV shows."

The Fox/7-Eleven deal is an example of a practice called reverse product placement. Instead of just putting products prominently in a movie or TV show, fake goods move from the screen to reality.

In some cases, 7-Eleven has contracted with manufacturers of similar products to make their Kwik-E-Mart counterparts. Malt-O-Meal, the Northfield, Minn., cereal maker, will conjure up a recipe for KrustyO's, for example. In others, existing products will simply be renamed. One flavor of 7-Eleven's own Slurpee will be sold as "WooHoo! Blue Vanilla" Squishee for the month.

Other recent examples of reverse product placement include Bertie Bott's Every Flavor Beans, which spun out of the Harry Potter books and movies, and Bubba Gump Shrimp Co. restaurants, which opened after the movie "Forrest Gump." 7-Eleven has done other movie-themed promotions, including one this spring for the latest Spiderman installment.

After Fox pitched a 7-Eleven tie-in last year, representatives from the studio, the stores, and Gracie Films — including Simpsons creator Matt Groening and executive producer James L. Brooks, met in Los Angeles to kick around ideas. Brooks added one — holding a contest to let one fan be drawn into a future episode of the TV show.

7-Eleven executives loved the idea. They had surveys showing a strong overlap between their customers and fans of the show — both tend to be young and male. It sounded like cash registers ringing.

"They've been looking at Squishees and KrustyO's and Buzz Cola for years and have never been able to put their hands on it," said Merkel, the advertising executive.

But they won't find Duff beer, the brand chugged by Homer Simpson. The movie will be rated PG-13, and selling a Simpson-themed beer "didn't seem to fit," said Rita Bargerhuff, a 7-Eleven marketing executive. "That was a tough call, but we want to make sure it's considered good, responsible fun."

Bargerhuff predicted extra sales to Simpsons fans will more than offset the cost of the promotion and create new customers for the chain. She also said the chain is prepared for crowds and will have extra security and clerks at the Kwik-E-Marts.

The promotion, however, is not risk-free. The proprietor of Kwik-E-Mart is a man named Apu who speaks in a heavy Indian accent. He is based on a manager Groening encountered while shopping at a 7-Eleven in Los Angeles nearly 20 years ago and plays to stereotypes about convenience-store operators and Asian immigrants.

Many of 7-Eleven's franchisees are Indian, company officials say, although they say they don't track exact numbers. Bargerhuff said they were "overwhelmingly positive" after hearing of the Kwik-E-Mart idea, but "it was not a 100 percent endorsement."

"There was definitely a concern of offending people," she said. "But they seemed to understand that 'The Simpsons' makes fun of everybody. The vast majority saw this as a great opportunity."

That's the case for Kumar Assandas, a 28-year-old franchisee whose parents immigrated from India. His store in suburban Las Vegas is one of the temporary Kwik-E-Marts.

"I know it's a stereotype, but it doesn't bother me. Everybody knows it's a joke," Assandas said. "I'm a big Simpsons fan myself, and maybe subconsciously it even inspired me to become a 7-Eleven owner."
Posted By: rex Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2007-07-02 7:39 AM
This is going to freak out all the pot heads and meth users here.
Posted By: rex Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2007-07-02 7:39 AM
This will freak out all the towel heads that work there.
Posted By: Uschi Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2007-07-02 7:40 AM
Your mother freaks out all the towel users that work here.
Posted By: Ultimate Jaburg53 Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2007-07-02 7:47 AM
 Originally Posted By: rex
This is going to freak out all the pod heads and meth users here.


Freaky pod people.

You're next!
Posted By: Friendly Neighborhood Ray-man Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2007-07-02 10:46 AM
 Originally Posted By: Rob Kamphausen

"We obviously want it to be a really good script...."

Then they should get the writers of seasons 1-8.
Posted By: notwedge Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2007-07-04 5:05 AM
We live really close to one of the Kwik E Marts so we went to it today. It was pretty cool and there were a lot of funny touches scattered around the place. I even got a blue flavored Squishee (and doesn't that sound like it should be a metaphor for something?)

We're going to go back next week when we havn't just paid all the bills and have plenty of money to waste on Simpsons stuff.
Posted By: rex Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2007-07-04 5:07 AM
there's also the fact that every other customer begged for the cashiers to say "thank you come again," with blatant disregard for whatever their true nationalistic pride may have been.
Posted By: Uschi Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2007-07-04 5:55 AM
"Thank you, come again!" has NOTHING to do with national pride. It's WORDS. ENGLISH. Maybe if the customers desired the person to say it in an Apu accent...
Posted By: URG Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2007-07-04 8:15 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qDIfTspSaP0
Posted By: rex Vote for the real Springfield - 2007-07-07 8:34 PM
http://www.usatoday.com/life/movies/simpsons-contest.htm

Watch the Oregon video. I know a couple people in it and the school they show is down the street from where I live. (Eugene and Springfield are basically the same town.)




You know which one to vote for.
Posted By: PJP Re: Vote for the real Springfield - 2007-07-07 8:35 PM
new jersey
Posted By: rex Re: Vote for the real Springfield - 2007-07-07 8:35 PM
No, Oregon. Watch the video. Its indisputable.
Posted By: PJP Re: Vote for the real Springfield - 2007-07-07 8:36 PM
 Originally Posted By: PJP
new jersey

Keep in mind that "West Springfield" is 3 times the size of Texas according to that episode with Arnie Ziff.
Also Springfield has a harbor, a volcano, Everest-like mountains, and a gourge.
Posted By: PJP Re: Vote for the real Springfield - 2007-07-07 8:43 PM
 Originally Posted By: PJP
 Originally Posted By: PJP
new jersey
Posted By: PJP Re: Vote for the real Springfield - 2007-07-12 1:38 AM
Vermont won!
Posted By: Cowgirl Jack Re: Vote for the real Springfield - 2007-07-21 4:44 AM
Here are pictures from the Orlando Kwik-e-mart:



I work with cops all day. This photo's going on the wall.



I am now the proud owner of a bunch of Krusty-Os.



I couldn't find Lisa, but Marge is cool!
Posted By: K-nutreturns Re: Vote for the real Springfield - 2007-07-21 6:06 AM
nice...ive been trying to find em out here...
Posted By: big_pimp_tim Re: Vote for the real Springfield - 2007-07-21 8:50 AM
there's one in dallas, i just can;t be bothered with an hour n a half drive to see it
Posted By: Pariah Re: Vote for the real Springfield - 2007-07-21 11:57 AM
There was an episode where Homer was watching a commercial about....Something and it very subtlely said, verbatim, "You're in Texas."

At first, I didn't believe it because of the snowfall eps, but then I realized that it's snowed in Dallas and San Antonio a couple of times.
Posted By: sneaky bunny Re: Vote for the real Springfield - 2007-07-21 8:55 PM
 Originally Posted By: K-nutreturns
nice...ive been trying to find em out here...

MOUNTAIN VIEW
Posted By: the G-man Re: Vote for the real Springfield - 2007-07-21 10:22 PM
 Originally Posted By: Cowgirl Jack

I am now the proud owner of a bunch of Krusty-Os.


Just remember: don't actually eat one. Remember the time that Bart swallowed a "jagged metal Krusty-O" included in the box as a premium? Or the time that Krusty held a press conference to show that swallowing a Krusty-O isn't dangerous and immediately began to gag? Or the box of Krusty-Os with the promotion "Flesh-Eating Bacteria In Every Box!".
Posted By: Chant Re: Vote for the real Springfield - 2007-07-22 8:01 PM
Spider-pig, spider-pig
Does whatever a spider-pig can...


lookout, here is the spider-pig
Posted By: the G-man `Simpsons Movie': `Woo-Hoo' or `D'Oh'? - 2007-07-24 11:12 PM
`Simpsons Movie': `Woo-Hoo' or `D'Oh'?

  • For a cartoon comedy dependent on how much ruination one homely yellow family can cause, there's an awful lot of drama behind "The Simpsons."

    Fans gripe that the animated show is nowhere near as funny as it was in the early glory years of the 1990s. Some predict the big-screen "The Simpsons Movie," opening Friday, will be similarly disappointing. Others wonder why it took so long for the show to make the leap to theaters.

    And distributor 20th Century Fox has stoked speculation about the quality of "The Simpsons Movie" by keeping it under tight wraps, declining to show it to critics until a few days before its release.

    That's generally taken as a sign that the movie is a stinker, though not always.

    Fox screened the movie over the weekend for a small group of entertainment reporters. The film delivered some laughs, but it certainly did not bring the house down.

    The lure of seeing even just a passably funny Simpsons tale on the big-screen might be enough to draw fans who have tuned in over the show's nearly 20-year run, though.

    Without giving away details, here's the basic story: Homer dumps waste from his new pet pig into an already polluted lake, causing an environmental crisis that prompts President Schwarzenegger and his evil aide (Albert Brooks) to seal off the town.

    Escaping enraged neighbors, the Simpsons begin a new life in Alaska, but they eventually realize they must stand by their hometown of Springfield, which faces an even greater threat.
Posted By: K-nutreturns Re: Vote for the real Springfield - 2007-07-26 12:14 AM
 Originally Posted By: sneaky bunny
 Originally Posted By: K-nutreturns
nice...ive been trying to find em out here...

MOUNTAIN VIEW


thanks...
Posted By: the G-man Re: `Simpsons Movie': `Woo-Hoo' or `D'Oh'? - 2007-07-26 2:25 AM
Tom Hanks, Albert Brooks in 'The Simpsons'

  • Albert Brooks, the great comedic actor and director, is one of the many stars who make a cameo in the film version that opens on Friday. Listed in the cast as "A. Brooks," the "Lost in America" star plays a character named Russ Cargill.

    Tom Hanks, Minnie Driver, Joe Mantegna, Kelsey Grammer, Green Day's Billie Joe Armstrong, Erin Brockovich (the woman Julia Roberts played in the film) and Phil Rosenthal (creator of "Everyone Loves Raymond") also voice cameos.
Posted By: Uschi Re: simpsons, the movie! - 2008-01-24 1:31 PM
Posted By: rex apology accepted - 2012-04-11 1:31 AM
 Originally Posted By: rex
No, Oregon. Watch the video. Its indisputable.



http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-cultu...l#ixzz1rfkQ3oq7

Its was always Springfield, Oregon. I was always right.
Posted By: the G-man Re: apology accepted - 2012-04-13 2:28 AM
Matt Groening Did Not Reveal The Real Location Of Springfield, You Stupid Internet:
  • Matt Groening revealed the location of the Springfield which inspired him to name the Simpsons’ town “Springfield.” He’s not saying that the Simpsons characters officially live in Oregon, and even if he did, that wouldn’t retroactively transform the world of the show to have taken place in Oregon this whole time. Groening also based the Simpsons’ names on those of his family, but this doesn’t mean that the Simpsons in any way are the Groenings; just because the Springfield thing is an intentionally vague joke-mystery doesn’t mean that the real-life inspiration for it just ‘becomes’ the in-show truth.
Posted By: Im Not Mister Mxyzptlk Re: apology accepted - 2012-04-13 9:16 AM
Yes, that was a stupid news story. He's been saying that for years.

This week's episode is written by a former Cracked writer (he's at Collegehumor now) so I'll check it out, even though every episode I've tried out for the past ten years has killed my soul a little bit more (the one by Seth Rogen, the one with Flight of the Conchords, the 500th one).
Posted By: Son of Mxy Re: apology accepted - 2012-04-13 9:18 AM
Chileans don't have soul.
Posted By: Im Not Mister Mxyzptlk Re: apology accepted - 2012-04-14 7:48 AM
We have narcocorridos.
Posted By: the G-man Life Imitates the Simpsons - 2012-10-04 1:05 AM
London's Daily Telegraph:
  • Two men have been banned from an all-you-can-eat restaurant after their appetites left the manager fearing for the future of his business

    George Dalmon, a former rugby player, and his friend Andy Miles were banned from all-you-can-eat restaurant, Gobi, In Brighton, after the manager branded them "a couple of pigs," . . .

    The manager, who did not want to be named, said the two friends were eating him out of business. He said: "Basically they just come in and pig out. We have put up with them for two years but I've had enough.

    "They are in such a hurry to beat everyone to the food they spoil everything. We are supposed to be a buffet but they eat everything out of the bowls before people can get there. We just can't keep doing this."


Tis no man, tis a remorseless eatin' machine...
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